Mali slams breach of airspace by French military plane

Mali has condemned what it called a “clear breach” of its airspace by a French military aircraft this week, warning of potential consequences should such practices continue.
Malian government spokesman Colonel Abdoulaye Maiga stated
that a complaint had been issued to France after one of its military planes
travelled between Ivory Coast’s capital Abidjan and the northern Malian city of
Gao on Tuesday.
The flight was a “clear breach” of Malian airspace, the
statement said, given the closure of most of the country’s land and air borders
due to regional sanctions recently imposed on the Sahel state.
The French military plane had also switched off its transponder,
preventing it from communicating with Malian aviation authorities, according to
the statement.
It added that the government would “refuse all responsibility
for the risks to which the perpetrators of these practices may be exposed in
the event of a further violation of our airspace”.
But a French military official, who declined to be named,
denied the Malian government’s claims, saying that the plane’s transponder had
been switched to “military mode”.
“All procedures were respected,” the official said, adding
that Malian authorities had also approved the aircraft’s flight plan.
However, French army spokesman Pascal Ianni said that “the
closure of the borders does not concern military flights”.
France has thousands of troops in Mali and neighboring Sahel
countries as part of an anti-jihadist force.
Its relations with Mali, a former colonial possession, have deteriorated sharply since the 2020 military takeover. France has also expressed displeasure over Mali’s increased military ties with Russia, a move that has fueled tensions between the two countries.